TECHNICAL PAPERS
Jun 6, 2009

On the Job versus Graduate School Training of Forensic Engineers—An Instructor and Professional Engineer’s View

Publication: Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Volume 24, Issue 1

Abstract

This paper provides insights from a graduate forensic engineering course for civil engineers and analyses its success from the instructor and student perspectives. The objective of the study was to evaluate teaching methods and settings for training of forensic engineers in light of new body of knowledge needs for the profession. The assessment methodology used student feedback before, during, and after the semester-long course and the instructor’s observations and prior forensic engineering consulting experience. The course was structured around student learning objectives that paralleled actual engineer training in professional consulting firms. The students used hands-on learning, field investigations, library-based research, and report writing. Focus was placed on learning basic research skills and applying scientific method which were at low levels among students. This is of concern to the profession as these skills, along with analytical ability, form part of the basic tool set of most engineers. By the end of the course, writing and review skills had improved significantly and student perceptions of the specialized skills turned more favorable. The students overwhelmingly appreciated inclusion of guest lectures by forensic engineers to demonstrate the relevance of this field. It was concluded that inadequate technical writing and reading skills, symptomatic of students in many engineering programs can be corrected through a forensic engineering course.

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Go to Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Volume 24Issue 1February 2010
Pages: 78 - 86

History

Received: Dec 31, 2008
Accepted: Jun 5, 2009
Published online: Jun 6, 2009
Published in print: Feb 2010

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Authors

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David O. Prevatt [email protected]
P.E.
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil and Coastal Engineering, 365 Weil Hall, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611. E-mail: [email protected]

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